News

‘Every Vote Counts’: What Women Leaders Know About Fixing Broken Political Systems—From Iceland to Washington

By January 23, 2026No Comments

| Katie Usalis | Ms. Magazine |

Alison Comyn [is] an Irish journalist-turned-senator from a country that’s used proportional representation—a form of ranked-choice voting—for generations.

In Ireland, elections use what Americans would recognize as a form of ranked-choice voting—known there as proportional representation with a single transferable vote (PR-STV). Instead of checking a single box and walking away wondering if you’ve “wasted” your one precious vote on a long-shot candidate, voters rank their preferences: 1, 2, 3, so on.

Every vote counts

“It’s an extremely fair system,” Comyn told me. “Every vote counts.”

She means this literally: When a candidate is eliminated, their votes transfer to the next preference on each ballot. When a candidate has more votes than they need to win, their surplus is redistributed too. She’s seen elections go to a 20th count, with single-digit margins triggering recounts.

Ranked-choice voting … allows voters to rank a candidate they love as their first choice and a more ‘establishment’ candidate second without feeling like they’ve thrown their voice away.

Read full articleJoin the Movement